HomeHalloween › Cartoon Skull

Cartoon Skull Coloring Page

A printable Cartoon Skull coloring page just right for early-finisher activities — bold outlines, big fillable shapes, and a clean letter/A4 print.

Cartoon Skull printable coloring page

SVG files print sharply at any size. For best results choose “Fit to page” in your browser’s print dialog.

About this coloring page

There is a particular satisfaction to coloring a Cartoon Skull — you start with a single area, pick a color you weren’t expecting, and suddenly the whole page has a personality. This printable is built for exactly that experience: lots of distinct regions, none of them overwhelming, all of them inviting a small creative decision. By the time the page is done, your kid has made twenty or thirty tiny choices, and that pile of choices is what makes the finished art feel like theirs.

For more halloween-themed activities, browse our curated activity guide with pairing ideas for parents and classroom teachers.

This page is sized to fit a 9x12 frame after a quick trim, which makes it a nice little gift project. Color the page, slice off the margins, and pop it in a dollar-store frame for a grandparent. We’ve done this every December and it never gets old. It also scales down beautifully — print four-up on a single sheet, cut them apart, and you have instant mini-cards for thank-you notes, lunchbox surprises, or the little stack of cards that always seems to disappear from the kitchen drawer.

Many of our holidays pages get used as conversation prompts as much as art projects. A Cartoon Skull is a small invitation to talk — about colors, about the subject, about a story your child wants to invent on the spot. We’ve added a few open-ended questions further down the page that you can use as conversation starters while your child is working, no special prep required.

Once it’s done, hang it on the fridge, mail it to a grandparent, or stack it in a binder of finished art. Coloring time is one of the few low-stakes ways small kids get to make creative decisions on their own — celebrating the result, even quietly, makes the next page that much more inviting. We try to keep at least three or four finished pages visible somewhere in the house at all times, and we rotate them weekly so nobody’s art ever feels old.

Coloring tips

  • Add a tiny pattern (dots, stripes, stars) inside one big area for visual interest without adding any drawing skill.
  • Color the background first with a light wash so the Cartoon Skull stands out.
  • Use the side of a peeled crayon for big areas and the tip for small details — same crayon, two different looks.
  • Layer two crayon colors on top of each other to invent a new shade; reds and yellows make a particularly good halloween-themed orange.
  • Tape the page to a window after coloring with markers; the light coming through gives a stained-glass effect kids love.
  • Try one color family per area — warm colors (red, orange, yellow) for a sunny mood, cool colors (blue, green, purple) for a calm one.

Want printable-friendly paper recommendations? See our quick guide to crayons, markers and printer paper →

Conversation starters

Coloring time is a great moment to talk. Try these prompts while your child is working on their cartoon skull page:

  • Where does this Cartoon Skull live? In a forest, a city, a kitchen, somewhere else?
  • If this Cartoon Skull could talk, what is the first thing it would say?
  • If you could give it a name, what would it be?
  • What three colors did you choose, and why those three?
  • What would change about this Cartoon Skull if it were nighttime instead of daytime?

Learn a little more

Most holidays-themed pages on KidColor pull from the wider world of public-domain illustration, then get redrawn with thicker outlines and simpler shapes so they print cleanly and color easily. The Cartoon Skull design is a friendly, kid-readable take on the subject — perfect as a jumping-off point for a quick conversation, a related picture book at the library, or a short field trip if the season is right. Pair it with one or two other Halloween pages from this site for a longer activity, or use it as a single five-minute warm-up before moving on to something else.

Looking for an extension activity? Pair this page with companion craft kit ideas for a longer rainy-afternoon project.

Try another theme

Kids who like Halloween usually love these too.